Amplifying Our Voice: Leading Boldly for Our Students, Our ... developing...NEA Leadership...

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Amplifying Our Voice: Leading Boldly for Our Students, Our Professions, and

Our Union

Developing Culturally Responsive Early Teachers:

Beginner to Board Certification

Casey Schurman, Doug Lea,

Camille Washington, & Jennifer Hlavka

NEA Leadership Competency: Leading Our Professions (LOP)

• NEA Leadership Competency progression level(s).

-Level 1: Foundational

-Level 2: Mobilizing & Powerbuilding

NEA Leadership Competency: Leading Our Professions (LOP)

• NEA Leadership Competency themes

• Supports professional excellence and builds capacity for continual improvement and learning to ensure the success of all students (CT1)

• Recognizes and promotes the association's role in improving the learning of all students (CT2)

• Advocates for policies and strategies that positively impact our professions and the learning of all students (CT3)

• Analyzes and applies research to determine the potential impact on our professions and the learning of all students (CT4)

NEA Strategic Goal and NEA Organizational Priority

• NEA Strategic Goal: building the capacity of the local, state, and national union to ensure the success of public education.

• NEA Organizational Priorities:• Early Career Educator• Racial Justice in Education• Supporting Professional Excellence

Introductions

• Jennifer Hlavka• Doug Lea• Casey Schurman• Camille Washington

The Partnership

HCPSS

● National Board

Certification Support

Program and NBCT

leaders

● dedicated grant manager

● in-kind services

(professional learning

rooms, intranet Canvas

Community)

NEA HCEA

● Funding and support

functions infrastructure

● Advocated for work of

the grant with HCPSS &

NEA

● Communicated with

HCPSS leadership and

celebrated

accomplishments

● Member Leaders

● Bargained for NBC

incentive structure

● Strengthened local and

national association ties

● Provided funding

● Grant Specialist provided

resources, support,

feedback, and mentoring

throughout process

● edCommunities

resources and

networking

● NEA Leadership Summit

attendance

The Need

• a disparity in engagement, via participation, between Black and Hispanic males compared to White males.

• Black and Hispanic male students received less attention/contact with the teacher.

• Black students were overrepresented in school-wide disciplinary data.• Black and Hispanic students receiving lower academic (letter) and effort

grades on their report cards.

Our Response

• A time for collaboration among educators (1.5 hours, twice per month, 12 sessions)

• Sessions designed around community, learning, and action

• Supporting teacher learning and growth

• Developing culturally responsive practices to increase engagement and belongingness among all students and student groups.

Design

1. Activate and Engage

2. Explore and Discover

3. Organize and Integrate(Krownapple, 2016)

1. Build Community

2. Concept Introduction

3. Commitment to Action

DESIGN FOR INDIVIDUAL SESSIONS AS WELL AS THE OVERALL PROGRAMMING

Content

1. Norming and Community

2. Defining Equity

3. Understanding Bias

4. Disparities in the classroom

5. Knowing the Learner

6. Teaching the Learner

7. Student Voice

8. Student Choice

9. Inquiry Based Learning

**Association 101 and National Board Information Session

Outcomes

“I learned that who we are, we bring to work with us

every day even though we might not realize that. We

come into this professional setting, and out kids are

doing the same thing. They’re bringing to use their

best selves, and this is allowing us to think about that

whole part of the emotional piece of learning.”

Outcomes

“I think for me it was the most valuable professional

development that I’ve received in my school

because I think it really touched us in a place that

we don’t often go as professionals.”

Outcomes

“I think sometimes for our toughest kids, too, when

they have that choice, it really makes them feel like

part of the classroom community, and helps them to

feel more included and then of course more engaged

in their learning, too.”

Outcomes

“It helped me stop and think that it’s okay sometimes

to just stop and think about what do my kids need right

at this moment. And really think about them as people

first and learners second, and that sometimes it’s okay

to focus on what they need as people and then what

they need as students.”

Evaluation

Strengths

• strong sense of community

• results observed in teachers and

students

• time for reflection

• ability to take things back and try

them

Needs

• more sessions

• opportunity for more people

• homework between the sessions

• more tangible/teacher-developed

materials created within the

sessions

Next Steps

Year 2-expand to middle school site

-continue pilot school into National Board

Certification Phase 1

Year 3-expand to high school site

-continue pilot school into National Board

Certification Phase 2

-continue middle school into National Board

Certification Phase 1

Initial Reflection

• What are your thoughts?

• What questions or comments do you have?

• How might this fit in your school or context?

• What barriers would impact implementation?

Use the organizer to do some initial planning for your version of implementation.

Norming and

CommunitySession 1

CommunityCircle

1. Say your name

2. If you were a superhero, what ONE superpower would

you have and why?

Norms for our Circles

● One person speaks at a time (with the talking piece)

● The conversation always goes clockwise

● You can pass by saying pass or passing on the talking piece

Agenda

1. Community Circle

2. Setting Norms

3. Education Timeline

4. How Are the Children?

Setting Norms

What are norms?

Why do we need them?

Setting Norms

What are norms?

A norm is the accepted behavior that an individual is

expected to conform to in a particular group, community,

or culture.

Why do we need them?

These norms often serve a useful purpose and create

the foundation of correct behaviors.

● Order (i.e., raising hand, bathroom pass)

● Respect (i.e., hands to self, kind words)

Let’s Set Our Norms

Things to consider…

● Taking care of our needs (food, bathroom, etc.)

● Technology (computers and cell phones)

● Discussion/Conversation

Education Timeline

Should include…

● All of your schooling stages

● Feelings/Emojis over time

May include…

● Specific dates, events, or locations

● Pictures or words

Education Timeline

Questions to Consider:

● How is this the same/different as my timeline?

● Why might these events/emotions occurred when they did?

● How would this be the same/different from what my students would

create?

Kassaerian Ingera?

Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg_tlwk0Uww&feature=youtu.be

(TQE Ohio. (2018, May 7). How are the children? [Video File]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg_tlwk0Uww&feature=youtu.be)

How are the children? - All the children are well.

What is your response to this video?

What if we did this as a nation, a district, a school? Would it change anything?

Can we respond, “All the children are well”? Why or why not?

Wrap Up

● Review of our norms

● Recap of education timelines

● Share “How are the children?”

Knowing the Learner

Make a list of things, that as teachers,

we should know about our students.

Knowing the Learner

● Share our lists

● How do we get to know these things?

● Why are they important?

Knowing the Learner

With a partner or trio…

● Find (or create) an assessment or activity, appropriate for

your age group, that would allow you to capture this

information about EACH of your students.

Share our assessments/activities

Commitment for Action

Is this assessment something that you can do with

your students before our next session?

Can we make that commitment to the group?

Questions /Comments

1 2 3 4

Time to take the template/plan for how this would work in your district. What would you add/change?

• audience?

• timing?

• funding?

• something else?

Session Outcomes

Consider how you would use our learning today in your current position/role:

• By the end of this presentation, the learner will be able to identify the

strengths and challenges of the PLC program.

• By the end of this presentation, the learner will be able to identify

integral components of the program.

• By the end of this presentation, the learner will be able to have the

knowledge and resources to implement this program in their locale.

Closing

• Please complete the evaluation for this breakout session by using the NEA Summit Mobile App!

• Please visit the Leadership Development Resources website at www.nea.org/leadershipdevelopment